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The most important diseases in forage legumes in Serbia
(International Legume SocietyNovi Sad : Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, 2013)
Lucerne (Medicago sativa L.), red and white clover (Trifolium pratense L., T. repens L.), field pea (Pisum sativum L.), common and hungarian vetch (Vicia sativa L., V. pannonica Crantz.) are the most important forage legumes ...
Intercropping of legumes with Helianthus species
(International Legume SocietyNovi Sad : Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, 2013)
Intercropping, or growing together more species at the same time in the same place is one of the oldest systems of cultivation in agriculture. Today, intercropping is recommended in sustainable agriculture due to various ...
Application of different Lactobacillus strains in production pea seed protein hydrolysates with antioxidative activity
(International Legume SocietyNovi Sad : Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, 2013)
In recent years antioxidant properties of plant derived protein hydrolysates were established. Antioxidative activity of these hydrolysates largely depends on specificity of the proteinase used for hydrolysis, duration of ...
Field pea (Pisum sativum L.) as a companion crop for the establishment of perennial legumes
(International Legume SocietyNovi Sad : Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, 2013)
Pea is one of the most important crops in the world. Among the many ways of utilization of this crop are that related for forage production. Forage pea may be cultivated alone as a pure crop, or in mixture with other crops, ...
Effect of seeding rate on plant density and dry matter yield of alfalfa
(International Legume SocietyNovi Sad : Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, 2013)
Alfalfa, as the most important perennial forage legume, is cultivated in Serbia on about 200.000 ha. In the world and in Serbia sowing rates are very variable (15-30 kg ha-1 ). The aim of this research was to investigate ...
Intercropping autumn-sown annual legumes with cereals for forage production
(International Legume SocietyNovi Sad : Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, 2013)
Intercropping annual legumes such as pea (Pisum sativum L.) and vetches (Vicia spp.) is one of the most ancient cultivation practice throughout the world, especially in temperate regions of Europe, Asia Minor, Near and ...
Intercropping spring-sown annual legumes with brassicas for forage production
(International Legume SocietyNovi Sad : Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, 2013)
Available references on intercropping brassicas with legumes are rather scarce. However, there are recent reports showing numerous benefits for a brassica component, especially in the form of an easier uptake of less ...
Some aspects of amaizing annual legumes
(International Legume SocietyNovi Sad : Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, 2013)
Intercropping maize (Zea mays L.) with annual legumes is distributed throughout the world, mostly in subtopic and tropic regions of Africa, Asia and South America, including warm season legumes cowpea (Vigna unguiculata ...
Developing schemes for intercropping annual legumes
(International Legume SocietyNovi Sad : Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, 2013)
We established four main principles for mutual intercropping annual legumes: same time of sowing; similar growing habit; similar cutting time; and one component has good standing ability (supporting crop) and another one ...
All legumes are beautiful, but some legumes are more beautiful than others
(International Legume SocietyNovi Sad : Institute of Field and Vegetable Crops, 2013)
Apart from their prominent roles as food and feed, legumes have numerous forms of non-food uses, with green manure and biofuel as the most widely present in agriculture and industry. Most legume species are easily recognised ...